No. 1 Florida 'chasin greatness' in stretch run

Florida guard Scottie Wilbekin (5) does the gator chomp as he leaves the court after Florida defeated LSU 79-61 in an NCAA college basketball game Saturday, March 1, 2014 in Gainesville, Fla. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin)

Coach Billy Donovan dropped the phrase on his players in recent weeks, hoping to grab their attention and keep them focused on all they can achieve this season.

The Gators already clinched their third Southeastern Conference regular-season championship in the last four years. They also have set school records for regular-season wins (27), consecutive wins (21) and consecutive wins at home (31).

Nonetheless, there’s plenty left to accomplish this season.

Florida (27-2, 16-0) can become the first team in SEC history to go 18-0 in league play, needing to win at South Carolina on Tuesday night and beat Kentucky in the team’s home finale Saturday. The team also is looking to wrap up a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament, and after three straight disappointing losses in regional finals, the senior-laden group won’t be satisfied with anything short of the Final Four.

“There are still things out there in front of our team,” Donovan said Monday. “There are things out there for these guys to achieve. I think those guys would like to take on those challenges. The biggest challenge is all that stuff doesn’t make a difference if we don’t play well against South Carolina.”

Florida dominated the Gamecocks (11-18, 4-12) in early January, winning 74-58 in Gainesville.

The Gators have gotten healthier and deeper since, with swingman Casey Prather (ankle), center Patric Young (knee tendinitis) and guard Kasey Hill (groin) having recovered from injuries and forward Chris Walker getting NCAA clearance to play early last month.

Donovan knows his team is capable of making another deep run in the NCAA tournament and is a real threat to win it all for the third time in school history. But keeping players dialed in and playing on edge is far from easy, especially when they hear so much talk about rankings, seedings and streaks.

“I think as he saw the results at the beginning of the season, winning so many games in a row, breaking records and all that, he just sees the ceiling of this team is really high and he wants to motivate us to keep striving for greatness,” Young said. “We can do that every game; we can do that every practice. We just need to focus on that each opportunity we get.”

The SEC played an 18-game conference schedule from 1967 through 1991, and then expanded the league slate last season with the addition of Missouri and Texas A&M.

Only two SEC schools have managed a 17-1 mark: Kentucky accomplished the feat twice (1970, 1986), and LSU did it in 1981.

The Tigers are actually the only SEC program to get to 17-0. They started 17-0 in 1981 before losing their regular-season finale against Kentucky.

So the Gators know they have a chance to do something special.

And they’re embracing it.

Donovan hasn’t stopped at the motto, either. He has been using visual effects to drive home his points.

After beating Tennessee and Kentucky on the road three weeks ago, Donovan asked forward Will Yeguete to grab a duffel bag sitting on the ground and throw it in his locker. Yeguete tried to pick it up with one hand, thinking he would toss it over his shoulder with ease. Donovan had the bag filled with weights, making it nearly impossible to carry with one hand.

Also this season, Donovan made a picture of the entire team driving in a car. Players were looking all around, staring at signs about their rankings and their records. No one was looking ahead, where their car was getting ready to crash into a wall.

“Are we going to worry about the things around the peripheral or are we going to be focused on the road and the lane we’re in right now?” Donovan said.

Right now, it’s the “chasing greatness” lane.

“We still have a lot of things to accomplish,” guard Michael Frazier II said. “We still have a lot of goals.”